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Fentress is an unincorporated community in Caldwell County, Texas, United States. [1] According to the Handbook of Texas, the community had an estimated population of 291 in 2000. [2] The community is part of the Austin–Round Rock Metropolitan Statistical Area. It was the setting for the novel The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate. [citation needed]
Caldwell County is a county located in the U.S. state of Texas.As of the 2020 census, its population was 45,883. [1] [2] Its county seat is Lockhart. [3]The county was founded in 1848 and named after Mathew Caldwell, a ranger captain who fought in the Battle of Plum Creek against the Comanches and against Santa Anna's armies during the Texas Revolution.
Fort Wolters U.S. Highway 180 gate in 2018. Fort Wolters was a United States military installation four miles northeast of Mineral Wells, Texas.. The fort was originally named Camp Wolters in honor of Brigadier General Jacob F. Wolters, commander of the 56th Cavalry Brigade of the National Guard, which used the area as a summer training ground. [1]
The camp will be constructed in phases of 300 beds every 30 days with the first phase expected to be completed by April, said Maj. General Suelzer, the head of the Texas Military Department.
Fentress, Texas, unincorporated community in Caldwell County, Texas, United States; Fentress County, Tennessee, county in the U.S. state of Tennessee; National Register of Historic Places listings in Fentress County, Tennessee; Naval Auxiliary Landing Field Fentress, U.S. military use airport in Fentress, Chesapeake, Virginia
A secret tunnel discovered last week on the U.S.-Mexico border will be sealed by Mexican authorities, an army official in Ciudad Juarez said Saturday. The tunnel, discovered on Jan. 10, connects ...
The USA Gymnastics National Team Training Center at Karolyi Ranch or simply Karolyi Ranch in unincorporated Walker County, Texas, southeast of Huntsville, was a gymnastics camp facility which was the site of the main training center for the United States women's national gymnastics team, located 70 miles (110 km) north of Houston within the Sam Houston National Forest.
An aerial view of the Kayenta Solar Plant in Kayenta, Arizona, part of a project backed by the Department of Energy to bring clean power to communities off the main electrical grid.